How to count in Sevconian

Can anyone help me out here?

 

Official documents produced by Duff & Phelps showed the following football creditors (ie those owed money by the now-defunct Rangers FC):

 

AS St Etienne                     £252,212.39

Arsenal                               £136,560.00

Chelsea                              £238,345.43

Manchester City               £328,248.71

Manea Florin Bucharest £37,500.00

Orebro SK                         £150,000.00

SK Rapid                            £1,011,763.44

Palermo                            £205,513.04

Total                                  £2,360,143.01

               

               

Celtic                                 £40,337.00

Dundee United               £65,981.49

Dunfermline                   £83,370.13

Hearts                              £800,000.00

Inverness Caly                £39,805.00

Total                                 £1,029,493.62

 

Taking the Scottish clubs first, we were told that the SPL retained prize monies which were due to Rangers in May 2012 in order to repay these debts.  We also know that the Rangers Fans Fighting Fund actually repaid Dunfermline although the actual sum according to the RFFF’s own “accounts” was £80,000.

 

Yet, in November 2012, it was widely reported that Hearts had rejected an offer of £500,000 to settle the outstanding debt of £800,000.  It gets even murkier when you start looking at press reports because in August 2012 it was reported by STV amongst others (following statements by Charles Green) that all debts to Scottish clubs had been paid apart from £500,000 due to Hearts in July 2013.  That would mean that only £449,493.62 had actually been repaid as of November 2012 [£1,029,493.62 – (£500,000 + £83,370.13)].

 

So, how much did the SPL actually withhold from Rangers FC and why did it not pay Hearts?  Given that Rangers should have been due something like £2.6m in prize money from the SPL for “finishing” 2nd, and actually received £500k from the SPL during the administration period, I am completely lost as to who and what was actually repaid by the SPL.

 

Turning to foreign clubs, at the same time as claiming that all Scottish football debts had been paid, Charles Green also claimed that he had sent payment to the SFA to repay all foreign football debts.  He also stated that the SFA had rejected this and told Sevco to repay the clubs directly.

 

It is curious therefore to find that Sevco only repaid SK Rapid in November 2012 following the threat of court action and an appeal to UEFA by the Viennese club.  It is even more curious to find that, according to Charles Green, Sevco only paid £800,000 having negotiated direct with SK Rapid.

 

At which point, we get to the RIFC prospectus from 7 December 2012.  This clearly states in setting out income and expenditure for the 3 months to 31 August 2012 that “Non-recurring expenditure includes £2.8 million of repayments in respect of old football creditors, which RFCL [Sevco] committed to paying”.  To my mind that states it has been paid especially as the prospectus goes on to state unequivocally that Sevco has no debt as of 31 October 2013 (let’s ignore the fact that £500k was not due to Hearts until July 2013).

 

The prospectus also states that £740,000 of RFC’s football debts had been repaid by Sevco and that a further 3 clubs were owed a maximum of £1.7m being SK Rapid, Arsenal and GAIS (Gothenburg).

 

I know what you are thinking – where the hell have GAIS come from?!!  Bizarrely they do not appear on the official creditors list produced by Duff & Phelps yet would appear to have been owed £551,676.56 [£1.7m minus £136,560 (Arsenal) and £1,011,763 (SK Rapid)] or even – if we believe the November press reports and Charles Green’s statements about SK Rapid – £851,676.  Furthermore, we now have a figure of £2.44m owed in football debts and how can you state on one page that you have no debts and on another page that you still owe £1.7m?

 

It is worth noting that the combined debt owed to St Etienne, Chelsea, Manchester City, Manea Florin, Orebro, and Palermo is actually £1.2m so either Sevco renegotiated these debts (to get to a figure of £740k) or some haven’t been repaid.  Interestingly, sources at Manchester City stated in May 2013 that no payment had been received.  I have been unable to ascertain from any other club if and how much they have been paid.

 

Looking back to GAIS, this must relate of course to the signing of Mervan Celik although the Daily Record reported on 9 February 2012 that Rangers and GAIS were in dispute with GAIS claiming they were owed £240k compensation.  One can only assume therefore that this debt had not been accepted by Duff & Phelps as at July 2012 and has been added subsequently either because Sevco accepted it as due or GAIS successfully took legal action or GAIS successfully appealed to UEFA/FIFA.  Either way, it doesn’t quite tally with the prospectus which suggests the debt owed is at least £551k.

 

One would have thought that Sevco’s audited accounts would provide a clearer picture but, alas, no!  Page 9, for example, states that £2.4m was paid to clear football debts “incurred pre-administration”.  Page 13 then states “Repayment of RFC 2012 plc football debt” as £2.721m.  Perhaps what was meant is that £2.4m has actually been paid the balance of £321k is yet to be paid for page 40 states “Football club creditors of RFC 2012 plc taken on by the Group of £251,000 are included within other creditors”?

 

So what we have is a whole series of numbers which are contradictory and confusing.  But perhaps this is unsurprising as we all know Sevconian language and arithmetic are extremely difficult to comprehend.  Still, I’m sure the blazers in Hampden will be on top of all of this; it was a key condition of the 5-way agreement after all.

Good Faith

good faith n. honest intent to act without taking an unfair advantage over another person or to fulfil a promise to act, even when some legal technicality is not fulfilled.

Two simple words.  And yet that is exactly where the Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator (OSCR) has firmly nailed its colours in investigating the Rangers Charity Foundation.

Let’s start with the numbers.

I can now confirm that the Rangers vs. AC Milan match in March 2012 made a net profit of £382,860 from a total income of £561,497 based upon official figures from The Rangers Football Club plc (in administration), OSCR and the Rangers Charity Foundation.

It is important to remember that this figure is net profit:  the administrators of The Rangers Football Club plc (Duff & Phelps) have already deducted costs of £178,637, including £40,000 for player travel and a management fee of £25,000 due to the Rangers Charity Foundation.

Under the revised and assigned agreement governing the match, AC Milan Glorie received £100,000 from this profit (NB, there is conflicting evidence that they have ever actually received it) and the Rangers Charity Foundation was due to receive £38,286 (10%).  This left a balance of £244,574 which was retained by The Rangers Football Club plc (in administration).

Total income was therefore split as follows:

Rangers Charity Foundation – management fee                                  £25,000 (4.45%)

Rangers Charity Foundation – profit share                                           £38,286 (6.82%)

AC Milan Glorie – profit share                                                                  £100,000 (17.81%)

The Rangers Football Club plc (in administration) – costs                  £153,637 (27.36%)

The Rangers Football Club plc (in administration) – profit share      £244,574 (43.56%)

Total                                                                                                             £561,497 (100%)

However, we also now know for certain from the accounts of the Rangers Charity Foundation that they did not receive their share of the profits (£38,286) from the administrators and the management fee that they were due was written off against monies they owed to the football club.

As hinted above, there is also no evidence to state definitively that AC Milan Glorie received their share either.  Scotzine have provided me with the text of an email they received from AC Milan in which it is confirmed that they “received all the payments agreed in the agreement by way of donation to the exclusive purpose of charity activities and projects.”  I contacted Carl Dunn, AC Milan’s agent in the UK who organised the legends game, but he denied all responsibility and even denied any knowledge of the game.  I also contacted AC Milan only to be told via the telephone that they had not received anything and they have yet to respond to my written request for clarification.  That mystery rumbles on, but for the purposes of this article let’s assume that AC Milan did indeed receive their share.

So what we have here is a football club taking a whopping 82% (£461,497) of the income from a charity game and retaining it for its own use.  That does of course include costs, but strip these out and the picture is no less rosy; 74% of the money that should have gone to charity from that single game (£282,860) actually ended up in the coffers of a morally, ethically and financially bankrupt football club.

That should, of course, come as no surprise to anybody who has followed my tweets or this blog.  After all, I and others have pointed out on several occasions that businesses in administration are quite simply barred under insolvency law from giving money away to charity and indeed anyone to the detriment of creditors without the express permission of the courts.  In essence, the Rangers Charity Foundation rather bizarrely became a creditor of The Rangers Football Club plc whilst it was in administration yet did not submit a creditor’s claim to the administrators… which may very well be a world’s first!

So what did OSCR find?

  • The charity’s decision-making process which allowed important decisions to be made by one trustee acting alone was in breach of trustees’ duties and constituted misconduct on the part of the charity trustees as a whole.
  • The way the decision regarding the fundraising event was taken did not comply with the requirements of the charity’s trust deed.
  • Issues of conflict of interest inherent in the charity’s structure had not been appropriately dealt with.
  • Although the decision was a breach of legal duties, it was made in good faith and in the interests of the charity given the risk that otherwise the fundraising event might not have taken place.

Would you like me to repeat the highlights?

  • “Breach of trustees’ duties”
  • “Misconduct”
  • “Did not comply with trust deed”
  • “Conflict of interest not appropriately dealt with”
  • “A breach of legal duties”

Now I am sorry but if I were a regulator and I came across a case with those five bullet points I know what I would do and it wouldn’t be to administer a slap on the wrist.

Let me try to give you an analogy: imagine, if you will, that you are the sole trustee of an estate benefitting a disabled individual who is unable to make decisions for his or herself.  Imagine now that you were found guilty of the above failings in respect of that estate and trusteeship.  What do you think would happen to you?

Precisely.

Or better still, imagine that as the sole trustee of a charity, you decided to help yourself to some of the charity’s cash in order to give it to another cause which you were close to.  What do you think would happen to you when caught?

Precisely.

If I were an ordinary member of the public without access to the evidence, I might accept (as did OSCR) that all of this was done in good faith.  But I have had privileged access to all of the evidence presented to OSCR by the Rangers Charity Foundation (some of which has been published on the blog).  I have also had access to additional evidence which was supplied to OSCR by other sources.  Accordingly, I can honestly state without any hesitation whatsoever that I do not accept that the actions of the Rangers Charity Foundation, The Rangers Football Club plc (in administration) and Duff & Phelps were ever made “in good faith”.

Let me explain by addressing the OSCR report section by section, starting with the penultimate bullet point on page two (from here on, excerpts from the OSCR report to be analysed will be in italics):

“The inquiry has taken some time to complete, partly due to the difficulty of obtaining information from some of the parties involved in a complex and fluid situation.”

I consider this to be a piece of misleading nonsense by OSCR.  It is absolutely true that Craig Whyte (identified as Trustee A by OSCR) failed to respond to any correspondence but that is almost certainly due to Mr Whyte’s pathological hatred of officialdom and the fact that he knew nothing about the activities of the Foundation.

Prior to Mr Whyte’s appointment as Chair of the Foundation, the Foundation had been led by Martin Bain in his role as CEO of The Rangers Football Club plc rather than in his role as a trustee of the Foundation.  Upon his accession to the Chair, Mr Whyte promptly appointed Jacqueline Gourlay as de facto Chair of the Foundation and line manager for the Foundation’s manager, Connal Cochrane, and played no further part in its management.

OSCR received all the information that it would receive by 31 May 2012 – to its credit, the Foundation co-operated fully with OSCR.

That information came solely from Ms Gourlay, supplemented by a letter from Martin Bain in which he merely endorsed everything Ms Gourlay had stated in her evidence, adding that she had been acting on his behalf since May 2011.  At no point did OSCR approach or ask Duff & Phelps for any information.

Furthermore, far from being a “complex and fluid situation”, it was actually, and paradoxically, a rather benign and simple situation.  What was complex and fluid was the situation at The Rangers Football Club plc (in administration) between 14 February 2012 and 14 June 2012, but for the Foundation it was business as usual.

“The Trust Deed gave The Rangers Football Club plc sole power to appoint new trustees. The Trust Deed also provided that the Chair of The Rangers Football Club plc is ex officio Chair of the Charity. This meant that the Chair of the Charity held that position by virtue of being Chair of The Rangers Football Club plc.

 

On 6 May 2011 The Rangers Football Club plc changed ownership and, as provided in the Trust Deed, the new Chair became ex officio Chair of the Charity.”

Absolutely spot on, yet it pays no regard to the fact that Craig Whyte was ‘removed’ from his role as Chair of The Rangers Football Club plc on 14 February 2012 and effectively replaced by the joint administrators.  This would have created another conflict of interest which, to my untrained eyes, could only have been resolved with recourse to the Court of Session and a discussion with Lord Hodge.

It might also be pertinent to point out at this juncture that the Foundation’s trust deed does not link the Foundation in any way to Rangers Football Club or Sevco beyond this power to appoint trustees and the Chair (a power which was removed in June 2012 by creation of a supplementary deed executed by our friends Paul Clark and David Whitehouse, see below).

“At the time we opened our inquiry the Charity had three charity trustees. Trustee A was the Chair of the Charity. Trustees B and C were senior employees of The Rangers Football Club plc. Trustee B had been inactive as a charity trustee for some time and resigned on 4 April 2012. Trustee C left the employment of The Rangers Football Club plc on 31 January 2013 but remains a charity trustee. Trustee A was removed as a director of The Rangers Football Club plc with effect from 1 June 2012. This ended Trustee A’s connection with the Charity.”

First up, I have no idea why OSCR should refrain from naming trustees unless someone had a wee word with them.

I have no problem naming them because it is undoubtedly in the public interest to do so and they can be easily identified by anyone simply by looking at the Foundation’s accounts.  Trustee A was Craig Whyte, Trustee B was Martin Bain and Trustee C was Jacqueline Gourlay.

Mr Bain was, of course, sacked by Mr Whyte in May 2011 so he was not a “senior employee” of Rangers FC at the time of the charity match, but note that OSCR state he was “inactive as a charity trustee for some time”.

I am somewhat bemused that OSCR should see fit to state that Mr Whyte’s removal as a director of The Rangers Football Club plc on 1 June 2012 “ended [his] connection with the charity”.  Would the same then not be true of Mr Bain when he was sacked and Ms Gourlay when she left the employment of Sevco? (OSCR seem to think that Ms Gourlay remained employed by The Rangers Football Club plc up until 31 January 2013 even though they themselves state that it entered liquidation on 31 October 2012)

There is absolutely no provision that I can see within the Foundation’s trust deed that allows for the removal of Mr Whyte as a trustee just because he is no longer Chairman of The Rangers Football Club plc.  Remove him as Chair perhaps, but that does not mean he should be removed as a trustee.  In fact, this is especially curious as no one had the power to remove Mr Whyte (Ms Gourlay’s discussions with Turcan Connell confirmed that, see below) and OSCR confirmed via a Freedom of Information request that they had not removed him nor sought to have him removed.  So who exactly decided this?  Funnily enough, OSCR are silent on that point and yet again it goes to the heart of the matter and “good faith”.

I am also somewhat bemused that OSCR have ignored the written evidence presented to them that Ms Gourlay, Mr Whyte and employees of The Rangers Football Club plc were actively engaged in attempts to remove Mr Bain as a trustee of the Foundation in the autumn of 2011.  That evidence clearly shows that Ms Gourlay et al even went so far as to take legal advice on that very point and then wrote to Mr Bain as suggested by their legal advisers (Turcan Connell).  This is important again in considering the “good faith” argument.

What the dates show, however, are that from June 2011 when Mr Bain left The Rangers Football Club plc until June 2013 when new trustees were appointed, the Foundation was never quorate under Scots law.  There is therefore absolutely no way that the Foundation should or could have entered into any legally binding contracts since it never had the trustee authority to do so; Ms Gourlay did not have the legal authority to rescind the agreement with AC Milan Glorie or the legal authority to assign it to anyone, let alone The Rangers Football Club plc (in administration).  That is an absolute basic principle of law and charitable law in particular and one which can be easily identified with a quick visit to OSCR’s own website and publications or even by quick enquiry of Glasgow Council for the Voluntary Sector; and yet OSCR would have us believe that Ms Gourlay made this decision “in good faith”.

“When it became clear in June 2012 that The Rangers Football Club plc was insolvent, the Charity took legal advice and executed a Supplementary Deed in July 2012 irrevocably revoking the right of

The Rangers Football Club plc to appoint trustees to the Charity and reinstating the trustees’ power to appoint new trustees.”

It is interesting that Ms Gourlay suddenly decided that it might be best to finally take some legal advice in June 2012 on the appointment of future trustees (yet delayed the appointment of new trustees until June 2013).  It is also interesting that she was not averse to taking legal advice on the removal of Mr Bain as a trustee in October 2011.  So why did she not take legal advice on the assignation of the charity game?  “Good faith?”  I don’t think so, do you?

It is also interesting that OSCR take the view that it only became clear in June 2012 that The Rangers Football Club plc were insolvent when any accountant could have stated that they were insolvent as of 14 February 2012 given the scale of debt.  Surely anyone senior working in the finance department of that football club would have known this given that they would have had access to the club’s financial affairs?  If a bunch of internet bampots could decipher and correctly call the financial implosion of Rangers and the chance of a CVA, why couldn’t a fully qualified accountant?

As an aside, perhaps OSCR should note that the Foundation never had the power to appoint trustees so could not have that power reinstated… but maybe that’s the level of competence that we are dealing with here.

The Rangers Football Club plc was renamed RFC 2012 plc and entered liquidation on 31 October 2012. Since there will not be another Chair of RFC 2012 plc, the charity trustees themselves will in future decide which charity trustee will be Chair.”

On 14 February 2012, Craig Whyte was removed as Chair of The Rangers Football Club plc and replaced by joint administrators appointed by the Court of Session.  Perhaps one for the legal minds, but wouldn’t that make Duff & Phelps de facto Chair and therefore Chair of the Foundation?

If so, there is an even bigger conflict of interest which has been deliberately ignored by OSCR.  And I say deliberate because that very point was put to them on more than one occasion by me asking for clarification.  On each occasion they ignored it, instead referring me to the Foundation for an answer knowing full well that the Foundation was refusing to respond to even basic enquiries (it took them eight months to send me their accounts and incomplete constitution when they have a legal duty to provide these to any member of the public).

If my hunch is right and Duff & Phelps became de facto Chair of the Foundation then there is no way that the decision to assign the charity game to the football club could have been made “in good faith”.  Instead, it would be plain old corruption and theft.

“As soon as The Rangers Football Club plc entered administration, Trustee C alerted the Joint Administrators to its undertaking to provide full support for the fundraising event in terms of resources, including the venue to host the friendly football match and staff to support it.”

Hmmm… as soon as the club enters administration, the trustee – who is also a senior employee in the finance department of the football club – alerts the joint administrators to the club’s commitment to a charity game?

I will come back to this later but is it not strange that she doesn’t immediately contact the other two trustees or at least Mr Bain, who later claims Ms Gourlay was acting “on his behalf”?  Wouldn’t anyone with half a brain (let alone a highly qualified finance professional) immediately contact their legal representatives for advice?

So, I ask the question; did Ms Gourlay contact the joint administrators in her capacity as trustee or in her capacity as employee of the club?  The conflict of interest is so pernicious and all-pervading that it is impossible to answer.  Yet OSCR did not ask the question; not even to at least establish a position.  Nor did they seek any evidence.  Instead, like so much here, they accepted the word of someone who was so heavily conflicted that they should never have been anywhere near any decision making, let alone be the sole decision maker.

How can any decision made under such circumstances be construed in the slightest as having been made “in good faith”?

“It was clear to Trustee C that, since the primary duty of the Joint Administrators was to ensure the creditors of The Rangers Football Club plc (In Administration) were not prejudiced, use of its resources for the fundraising event would need to be justified on a cost benefit basis. Trustee C considered there was a very real risk that the Joint Administrators would not permit The Rangers Football Club plc’s resources to be used for the fundraising event. If that happened, the fundraising event would not take place and neither the Charity nor the AC Milan Foundation would benefit.

 

In Trustee C’s view unless the Joint Administrators had control of the income from the fundraising event they were unlikely to agree to the event going ahead. Assigning the Charity’s interest in the Agreement with AC Milan Glorie (‘the Agreement’), dated 16 January 2012, for the fundraising event to The Rangers Football Club plc (in Administration) would ensure the Joint Administrators would  recover costs and satisfy their duty to creditors to derive income from it.”

Suddenly, Ms Gourlay has discovered her knowledge of insolvency law and practice!  It is fascinating – is it not – that she can clearly see how the charity game might be a problem for the joint administrators yet is strangely unable to see how assigning the rights away is not a problem for the charity.  It is also fascinating that despite clearly understanding insolvency law and practice, she fails to see that this would absolutely preclude the joint administrators from paying over any funds to the Foundation.

In reflecting upon this section, it is vital to remember that the original agreement with the football club established through precedence over the years was that all income would be treated as charity income (thus allowing it to avoid paying VAT) but that the football club would be reimbursed its costs in full.  Ms Gourlay’s financial model, which I have posted here before, clearly shows this.  It is also vital to remember that OSCR had access to this information too.

So let’s be clear: there was never any danger that the club would not recover its costs.  Even an attendance of 20,000 would still have recovered costs.  The club may not have made any profit, but it certainly would never have lost any money on the match.  The cost-benefit equation should never have, and never did, enter into the discussion.

The second paragraph really is the crux of the matter – “unless the joint administrators had control of the income”.  Because then they could do what they liked with the funds under insolvency law and this fact would not have been lost on Duff & Phelps who went on to prove themselves adept at the sharp end of insolvency practice.  A fact not lost on Ms Gourlay either, as it was on her evidence that OSCR stated “the joint administrators would recover costs and satisfy their duty to creditors to derive income from it”.

So we have a qualified accountant and insolvency practitioners who seem to have a highly selective recollection of insolvency law, yet we are to believe that the decision to hand over the proceeds of a charity game was made “in good faith”?

“Trustee C considered that assigning the Charity’s interest in the Agreement to The Rangers Football Club plc (in Administration) fulfilled the legal duties – of a charity trustee because the event would still be able to take place and, in terms of the agreement reached with the Administrators, the Charity would still receive some benefit. Trustee C did not obtain professional advice before making this decision.”

I am not sure where to even begin.

It is akin to saying that if I collect £10,000 for charity but then decide to retain £9,000 for my costs, it is okay provided charity receives £1,000.

Are we seriously to believe that a highly educated, professional person and trustee really believed this rubbish?  If this is the level of intelligence employed in Ibrox, it is little surprise that the club went into administration and was liquidated.

This line of argument would never stand up in any court of law, anywhere.  It is up there with idiots who wander through customs with 16 kilos of cocaine in their bags then claim they didn’t know it was there and they were forced to carry it.

Look at the numbers at the top of the page.  Ms Gourlay handed over £250,000 in return for a management fee of £25,000 and a 10% share of profits knowing full well that neither would be paid to the charity because it was completely illegal without express permission from the courts.  Not only that but she didn’t even consider getting legal advice.  So she is either immensely dense and staggeringly incompetent when it comes to charity law and trustee responsibilities (in which case the first call she should have made was to Turcan Connell) or she knew full well what she was doing and why she was doing it.

“Good faith”, my arse.

Despite this, OSCR do not see fit to bar her from serving as a trustee with any other charity or forcibly remove her as a trustee of the Foundation (more on that later).

“The date of the decision to assign the event was, unfortunately, not formally recorded but was made on or about 21 February 2012.”

Now that’s convenient, isn’t it?

A decision of this magnitude and no one within the Foundation thought to record it formally, not even the Foundation Manager, Connal Cochrane.  I can understand – at a push – that Ms Gourlay, being employed by the club, might have struggled at this time; but Mr Cochrane who was employed by the Foundation and therefore secure in his job?  What sort of incompetent organisation are we supposed to think these fools were running?

I do not believe for one instant that neither Ms Gourlay nor Mr Cochrane thought to record this momentous decision.  “Good faith”?  Absolutely no chance.

Besides, surely the estimable Duff & Phelps, who would have had to record everything for the Courts, would have kept a record?  Sadly we do not know because, bizarrely, OSCR did not think to request any evidence from the joint administrators or the Court of Session.

The date of that decision is critical because OSCR made great play that Martin Bain had written to them to affirm that Ms Gourlay was acting on his behalf.  What OSCR forgot to mention in their report is that Ms Gourlay confirmed in writing to them that she did not inform Martin Bain until 27 February 2012.  “Good faith” or a badly-executed cover up?

“Under the terms of the Agreement the Charity had been due to receive up to 60% of the net profit from the fundraising event in addition to a £25,000 management fee. Mindful that if the fundraising event did not proceed the Charity would receive nothing, and that it had already incurred costs in relation to organising the event, Trustee C agreed to assign the Charity’s interest in the Agreement to The Rangers Football Club plc (in Administration) on the agreement with the Administrators that the Charity would receive 10% of the net profits together with the management fee.”

I am slightly concerned that OSCR is managing news here because Ms Gourlay confirmed in writing to OSCR that the Foundation had only incurred costs of £12,500 at the time of the decision to assign the rights to the charity game, although what these were has never been spelled out and clarification was never sought by OSCR.

Remember these costs would have been borne initially by The Rangers Football Club plc and then reimbursed by the Foundation as this was how their “symbiotic” relationship worked.  Call me a fool but would it not have made sense to suggest that if the match was cancelled then the football club should not charge these costs back to the Foundation?  Or, better still, to cancel the match but continue with the dinner (has everyone forgotten about that?) which on its own was projected to make a profit of £70,000, thus leaving the Foundation at least £45,000 to the good.

It is important here to remember that Ms Gourlay and the Foundation had been budgeting for a crowd of 25-30,000 which would have generated a net profit of c£200,000.  What she was giving up therefore was a projected 50% profit of £100,000 to offset costs of £25,000, which could and should have been recovered from the football club.  In the end, they got a crowd of 47,000 generating the sums outlined above.  Doesn’t seem such a good deal anymore, does it?

Furthermore, bearing in mind what we know about insolvency law, the idea that the Foundation was going to recover anything is simply laughable.  Yet we are asked to believe that this was all done “in good faith”.

Note also that this is now presented to us as Ms Gourlay agreeing to assign the Foundation’s interest.  Yet this news was announced to the world as “The Rangers Charity Foundation suggested the club should now benefit from the match and we were delighted that the AC Milan Foundation agreed.”  Even OSCR’s report acknowledges that that was the case yet they skate over this as if it was inconsequential.

What this highlights is someone presenting unclear and contradictory evidence rather than someone acting “in good faith”.

“The only alternative to this assignation that Trustee C considered was cancellation. The option of the Charity paying a fee to The Rangers Football Club plc (in Administration) for the use of Ibrox Stadium and facilities was not explored, even though this may have resulted in less of a reduction in income to the Charity. However, a fee would have left the Charity in control of event income and this, in Trustee C’s view, meant there would be uncertainty over the event taking place.”

What a piece of tautological nonsense:  they didn’t explore hiring Ibrox but hiring it would have left them in control of income which would have made it uncertain that the event would go ahead?!?  Did OSCR seriously accept this rubbish?

Bearing in mind that the club was already going to be reimbursed full costs from the event had it gone ahead as originally envisaged, I am struggling to see what price the joint administrators could have conceivably charged for the use of Ibrox over and above costs that would have rendered the event unprofitable.

“Tickets for the football match were not made available for sale until after the assignation to The Rangers Football Club plc (in Administration). Tickets for the dinner had already gone on sale but all purchasers were contacted to explain the change in circumstances and offered a refund.”

This is a complete red herring because the issue is not misleading the public but the diversion of funds from a charity to a non-charitable entity – The Rangers Football Club plc (in administration) – by someone who had a complete conflict of interest.  Besides, hadn’t match tickets actually gone on sale to season ticket holders on 20 February?  General public sale was planned to be 27 February.

In relation to the dinner, why did this not proceed on the original basis?  As noted above, it could have continued as per the original arrangements and generated a profit of £70,000 all of which would have gone to charity.  Furthermore, why would they change the dinner since this had nothing to do with the rental of Ibrox or the joint administrators?  There was absolutely no need to change anything about the dinner and, even if we accept Ms Gourlay’s arguments about the match, changing the dinner was completely unnecessary and a criminal dereliction of her fiduciary duty to the charity.  At the very least, the £70,000 profit that was generated by this dinner and which was diverted to the football club should be recovered from the trustees themselves.

“After the assignation of the Charity’s interest in the Agreement to The Rangers Football Club plc (in Administration) Trustee B subsequently advised OSCR that Trustee C had afforded the utmost scrutiny and diligence to the Charity’s affairs and that Trustee C had acted on behalf of Trustee B throughout the process. We wrote to Trustee A concerning the assignation but did not receive a reply.”

When I first read this paragraph, I actually burst out laughing.  A character reference for Ms Gourlay from Mr Bain?  The man she was scheming to remove as a trustee in October 2011 (if she disagreed, why did she fail to raise any concerns with Turcan Connell or OSCR)?  The man who used to employ her?  The man who went on to employ her when she left the employment of Sevco?  Conflict of interest, anyone?

Where is the written evidence that Ms Gourlay was acting on behalf of Mr Bain?  Surely not another important decision that went unrecorded?  And how does this square with Ms Gourlay’s attempts to remove Mr Bain as a trustee in October 2012?  The written evidence proving this was submitted to OSCR so why have they chosen to ignore it?

Remember, Mr Bain didn’t know anything about the decision to assign the game to the club until 27 February 2012 at the earliest, a full six days after the decision was made by Ms Gourlay and my information is he did not respond to her until 1 March.

PS: I’ve got news for you, Martin, no trustee acts on behalf of anyone else; you hold office (trust) on behalf of the public who are supposed to benefit from the charity.

“The event went ahead as scheduled. In addition to the management fee of £25,000, the Charity received £38,286 as its 10% share of the net profit from the fundraising event.”

Absolutely not.  As I have demonstrated above and backed previously with written evidence from the Foundation itself, the Foundation did not receive a penny from the match.  The management fee was written off against monies owed to the club and it never received the 10% donation.  Of greater concern, perhaps, is that the Foundation did not press any claims on Duff & Phelps to be a creditor of the club as it should have done in relation to that 10% donation.  “Good faith” or an inconvenient truth?

“Section 66 of the 2005 Act places a duty on charity trustees to act in the interests of the charity. When a potential conflict of interest arises, charity trustees must put the interests of the charity first. A charity trustee who is unable to do this should declare the conflict and take no further part in the deliberations and decision-making process about the matter.

 

Each of the three charity trustees had a relationship with The Rangers Football Club plc either as an employee or a director of the company. This meant that any decision involving The Rangers Football Club plc and the Charity presented the potential for a conflict of interest. When The Rangers Football Club plc entered administration and the fundraising event was put at risk, the potential for a conflict of interest became real and irreconcilable because of the conflict between the charity trustees’ duty to act in the interests of the Charity and either their duties as an employee or as a director of The Rangers Football Club plc. If they had acted in the interests of one, they would have failed in their duty to the other. They could not act in the interests of both.

 

Charity law also provides for a very specific conflict of interest that may arise between the interests of the charity and those of the person or organisation responsible for appointing the charity trustee.

Should such a conflict arise, the law makes clear the charity trustee’s duty is to act in the interests of the charity. A charity trustee who is unable to put the interests of the charity before those of the person or organisation responsible for appointing them is required to disclose the conflict of interest and refrain from participating in any deliberation or decision with respect to the matter in question.

 

The 2005 Act makes clear that the duty to act in the interests of the charity and avoid conflicts of interest is not only a duty on individual charity trustees; it is also the duty of their fellow charity trustees to ensure that they do so.”

So why did Mr Bain and Mr Whyte not do so?  Because neither Mr Whyte nor Mr Bain had the faintest clue or interest in what was happening in the Foundation; if they had, don’t you think they would have attended or called for board meetings?  Instead, they allowed the Foundation to trundle on its merry way as a de facto department of the football club (and, even then, only a team within the PR department).  It is interesting that OSCR never once asked for board minutes prior to May 2011.  I do not know the answer but I’m going to take a wild stab in the dark and guess that there were very, very few board meetings throughout the history of the Rangers Charity Foundation.

Why did Ms Gourlay not address the conflict of interest or at least seek legal advice?  Because she knew very well that to do so would have marked her out as a troublemaker for the joint administrators, which would have endangered her position as an employee?  Not only that, but as a key finance employee within the club, did she recognise the need to secure every penny for the club to try and help it survive administration?

I find this the most eloquent and sensible passage in the entire report quite possibly because it is also the most accurate.  Without any shadow of a doubt, every trustee was guilty of a breach of their duty of care to the Foundation.

“When we met with Trustee C, the relationship between the Charity and The Rangers Football Club plc was explained to us as a “symbiotic” one. The Charity was effectively seen as a department within The Rangers Football Club plc although we were assured there was an awareness that the Charity “worked to different rules”. The Rangers Football Club plc provided office space and other support for the Charity.”

Anyone reading this might skim over the detail and even the bigger picture to concentrate upon the first and last sentences. That would, however, be a mistake because what this paragraph actually tells us is the bigger picture:  OSCR had one meeting with Ms Gourlay (9 March 2012 in the Teacher Building, St Enoch Square, Glasgow) and OSCR took pretty much everything she said at face value and without interrogation.

This was no hard-nosed, good cop-bad cop Taggart style interrogation.  Instead, it was a polite chat over tea and biscuits to reassure everyone that this was all just a big misunderstanding.

Did OSCR ask for further information such as board minutes prior to May 2011?  Did OSCR ask Duff & Phelps for information or petition the Court of Session?  Did OSCR meet with Martin Bain or Craig Whyte?  Did OSCR take Ms Gourlay’s evidence and subject it to any rigorous testing or checking?  Did OSCR ask Ms Gourlay for copies of agreements between the club and the Foundation?  No, instead they were “assured” by Ms Gourlay.  Well that’s alright then, isn’t it?

In terms of the detail, what it tells us is that there is an admission that not only did the trustees have a real, profound and irreconcilable conflict of interest but that the Foundation as a whole did because it was de facto an integral part of the club.  This was no independent Foundation; it was simply a part of the Rangers PR department guided by the club and its strategy and not by trustees.  Further evidence of this was actually submitted to OSCR in the form of Foundation management reports (all of which are remarkably similar in content, but that’s another issue) which talk about future strategy in line with the club’s CSR and Football in the Community agenda as well as operational issues that are inextricably entwined with those of the club.

“We were told that since the change in The Rangers Football Club plc’s ownership in May 2011 no charity trustee meetings had been held, and since then Trustee C had been the only trustee actively involved with the Charity. Trustee C met with the manager of the Charity on a weekly basis to ensure that at least one trustee was fully aware at all times of the current state of affairs of the Charity.”

I assume OSCR obtained written records of these meetings?  No?  Didn’t think so.

Wonder if they thought to ask or seek evidence for whom Mr Cochrane actually reported to on a day-to-day basis and who actually carried out his appraisals?  No?  Didn’t think so.

Wonder if OSCR asked for copies of emails or other correspondence between Ms Gourlay and the other trustees to ensure they were being kept up to date?  No?  Didn’t think so.

Wonder if OSCR asked for copy of minutes prior to May 2011?  No? Didn’t think so.

“Trustee C highlighted to OSCR the statements in the Charity’s 2011 and 2012 Trustees’ Annual Reports (part of the Charity’s accounts) that said all major decisions were made by charity trustees at periodic meetings or else by an individual trustee in the interim as necessary.”

Is that meant to be some kind of justification?  If it is then it’s up there with the Sandy Bryson defence strategy.  But then I guess trustee meetings every three years could be construed as “periodic”.

“Trustee C considered the decision to assign the Charity’s interest in the Agreement had been taken while acting as the “individual trustee in the interim as necessary” and had informed the other charity trustees of the decision after it had been made.”

Yep, there it is in black and white:  Jacqueline Gourlay made the decision on her own without recourse to either legal advice or other trustees and only informed other trustees after the fact, presenting them, in essence, with a fait accompli.  And, as OSCR go on to state quite clearly, that was completely wrong and outwith the powers of the Foundation’s trust deed and the Trusts (Scotland) Act 1921 compounded by Ms Gourlay’s blatant conflict of interest.

“Based on the information provided to us, we further consider that the decision-making process in the Charity, which allowed a decision to be taken by one trustee to assign the Agreement with AC Milan Glorie to The Rangers Football Club plc (in Administration) without consultation with the other charity trustees and without a quorum, was in breach of the charity trustee duties. In addition, the conflict of interest presented by the assignation was not managed appropriately and professional advice was not obtained as required by the Charity’s Trust Deed.

 

A breach of section 66 charity trustee duties is misconduct in the administration of a charity…

 

After careful consideration of the circumstances…we have concluded that although the decision was a breach of legal duties the circumstances were such that it would not be a proportionate use of our regulatory powers to take further action. The decision to assign the Charity’s rights in the contract was made in good faith and in the interests of the Charity given the risk that otherwise the event may not have taken place, in which case the Charity would have received no benefit at all.”

So let’s get this straight.  There’s been:

  • a complete breach of section 66 charity trustee duties
  • an inherent and mismanaged conflict of interest
  • maladministration and mismanagement

But we are supposed to believe that it was all done in good faith?  Move along Timmy, nothing to see here!  I hope I have presented ample evidence to demonstrate why this is patent nonsense but let me reiterate:

  • The Rangers Football Club plc (in administration) contrived – with the acquiescence, approval and assistance of the Rangers Charity Foundation – to divert to itself £282,860 that should have been due to the Foundation.
  • This was a decision made by the joint administrators and the Foundation’s only active trustee (a heavily-conflicted, qualified accountant who worked in the Rangers’ finance department) who would have been completely aware of what they were doing and how it would fall foul of the Insolvency Act 1986.

Where is the “good faith” here?

Looking at the available evidence and the findings of the OSCR investigation, I am staggered that they could conceivably accept the argument put forward by Jacqueline Gourlay that she acted “in good faith” and “in the best interests of the charity”.  Not only that but that they accepted her written and verbal evidence without murmur or question.

On 21 February 2012, Ms Gourlay had several options open to her which would still have brought significant income to the Foundation and she did not consider them at all, nor did she discuss these with her fellow trustees or professional advisers.  Instead, less than a week later, she assigned the right to 74% of the profits from a charity match and dinner to a morally, ethically and financially bankrupt football club.

“At the time we opened our inquiry the assignation of the Charity’s interest in the Agreement to The Rangers Football Club plc (in Administration) had already taken place. OSCR has no powers under the 2005 Act to direct the Charity to renegotiate the assignation to increase its share of net profit from the fundraising event. We also recognised that the Joint Administrators’ primary duty to creditors would preclude such renegotiation. We were aware as well that, when tickets for the football match became available for sale, the basis on which the event was going ahead was well publicised. Members of the public may have bought tickets specifically to benefit The Rangers Football Club plc (in Administration) rather than the Charity.”

OSCR may not have any powers to order the Foundation to renegotiate the assignation but it does have powers to pursue trustees for financial mismanagement and to seek repayment of misappropriated or maladministered funds.

Hidden in the middle of this paragraph is what I believe to be the key element in my case:  “the joint administrators’ primary duty to creditors would preclude such renegotiation”.  OSCR rightly recognise that, in actual fact, Duff & Phelps’ only duty was to the creditors of The Rangers Football Club plc (in administration).  Not only could they not renegotiate the assignation but they could never hand over any funds to charity.

I’m not going to make a big thing about this, but my understanding and my records show that tickets for the match actually went on sale to season ticket holders on 20 February 2012, ie before the assignation was agreed.  Nevertheless, it is irrelevant because the Foundation was still budgeting for a profit of £200,000 according to Ms Gourlay’s own financial model and projections which were based on historical precedent.

“Our deliberations included an assessment of the risk the three charity trustees might pose to other charities of which they are also charity trustees, with a view if necessary to monitoring these charities proactively in future. To assess this risk, we wrote asking them for information about other charities with which they are involved as charity trustees. Trustee C remains a charity trustee of the Charity, and Trustees B and C disclosed to us the names of other charities with which they are involved as charity trustees.

 

After assessing carefully the information we hold about these charities, and in the knowledge that we have made Trustees B and C aware of our finding of their breach of duties, we consider that the risk posed is minimal and that it would not be proportionate to undertake proactive monitoring of these charities.

 

Trustee A did not respond to any of our requests for information, including a request for information about other charity trustee roles. As a result, we have been unable to assess the risk posed to other charities of which Trustee A may be a charity trustee. Should we become aware that Trustee A is a charity trustee of another charity we will consider the risk this might pose. We have made Trustee A aware of our finding of breach of charity trustee duties.”

An assessment of risk?  Really?  How was that carried out?  By asking them what other charities they were involved in.  Pardon me for laughing but isn’t that a bit like asking a convicted criminal if he has been involved in any other crimes?  Still, given that OSCR took Ms Gourlay’s word for everything without subjecting it to any rigour or examination, I am hardly surprised here.

“Since our inquiry opened, Trustee C has taken independent legal advice to improve the Charity’s governance, particularly in relation to its relationship with The Rangers Football Club Limited, the new company. Trustee C appointed two new charity trustees in June 2013. Trustee C has also been advised that the Charity should put regulations in place to govern the Charity’s relationship with The Rangers Football Club Limited, and this will be taken forward with the new charity trustees.”

Are you sure about that?  Have you got any evidence to back that up?  Because my information is that there has been one conversation with Turcan Connell and that was only to discuss the amendment of the trust deed to allow existing trustees the right to appoint new ones.

How were the new trustees recruited and appointed?  Was a skills audit carried out to identify the skills, experience and type of person required? Was there a public advertisement and an open, transparent recruitment process?

“We have recommended to Trustees A, B and C that they obtain training in their section 66 duties because we consider their understanding of their charity trustee duties needs to be strengthened. We look to them to develop a proper awareness that section 66 requires charity trustees to act in the best interests of the charity and with the care and diligence it is reasonable to expect of a person who is managing the affairs of another person, particularly in relation to decision making, identifying and handling appropriately potential conflicts of interest and ensuring they understand and comply with provisions in the charity’s governing document.”

Well, I am sure that will make everything all right.

Except, of course, it didn’t, because the Foundation (still led by Ms Gourlay) then got into bed with Sevco to host another charity game which this time only donated £75,000 to charity from a total profit of c£240,000.

Still, all “in good faith”…

Finally, a footnote as it were.  I was so astounded at OSCR’s decision (though not its findings which I had predicted for quite some time) that I gave copies of all the evidence to a past president of a professional membership and regulatory body, a current senior executive of a regulatory body, and a practising solicitor.  Not one of them understood how OSCR could have ever come to the conclusion that the Foundation had acted “in good faith” simply because this could never be established through OSCR’s “fundamentally flawed, inadequate and inept investigation”.

And yet, sadly, and rather ridiculously, that is where this must end unless you, the reader, petition your MSP to look into this travesty and raise it with the Scottish Government because there is no right of appeal against OSCR’s decision by anyone.  There is no ombudsman, no independent appeals body, no government minister; as a non-ministerial department within the Scottish Government, the only higher authority is the Scottish Parliament and there isn’t even a formal mechanism to appeal a decision there.  In other words, you, the people whom OSCR is set up to protect, have no protection from them.

In a democracy, that is disgraceful.

When is a regulator not a regulator?

Okay let’s start with a conundrum:

 

How can Rangers Charity Foundation state on their website that “it is regrettable that the Foundation was never party to the premise or nature of the original complaints made to OSCR” yet Tinfoil Graham can state that the club are well aware of my accusations and my identity?  Now I know that Tinfoil has less credibility than even Snakeoil Charlie but still…

 

It is also strange that the Foundation has forgotten the investigation by Third Sector magazine from March 2012 as well as 8 telephone conversations between myself and staff there (including Connal Cochrane and Jacqueline Gourlay) not to mention copious e-mails from me to them in which the allegations were clearly and explicitly set out as far back as March 2012.  Do Mr Cochrane or Carol Patton not recall demanding to know my real identity and address way back then (a curious trait, but rather common amongst Sevconians I have found)?

 

Surely not another untruth to emerge from Ibrox?

 

It is also surely ironic that on the day that OSCR publish a report into a charity explicitly criticising the links between and the control held over the charity by the football club, the CEO of an entirely new football club should come out with a statement on the matter postulating that it vindicated his club and charity?

 

But, to more serious matters…

 

OSCR has finally published its long-awaited report into the Rangers Charity Foundation; an 11-page, 4,000 word report which can be condensed into 4 meaningful pages.  Or, better still, condensed to an executive summary which it is worth reproducing here:

 

  • OSCR has concluded its inquiry into the actions of Rangers Charity Foundation (‘the Charity’) in agreeing to forego most of its share of the proceeds of a fundraising event in favour of The Rangers Football Club plc (in Administration).
  • OSCR found that the Charity’s decision-making process which allowed important decisions to be made by one trustee acting alone was in breach of trustees’ duties and constituted misconduct on the part of the charity trustees as a whole.
  • OSCR also found that the way the decision regarding the fundraising event was taken did not comply with the requirements of the Charity’s Trust Deed.
  • OSCR identified that issues of conflict of interest inherent in the Charity’s structure had not been appropriately dealt with.
  • OSCR found that although the decision was a breach of legal duties, it was made in good faith and in the interests of the charity given the risk that otherwise the fundraising event might not have taken place.
  • Having looked carefully at the whole situation, OSCR has not found that the ongoing risks to charitable assets or to the reputation of the sector justify OSCR taking action against any of the trustees.
  • The inquiry has taken some time to complete, partly due to the difficulty of obtaining information from some of the parties involved in a complex and fluid situation.
  • This inquiry identified a number of learning points relevant to the wider charitable sector.

 

So let us be absolutely crystal clear: the Scottish charity regulator found a conflict of interest and none of the trustee duties relating to conflicts of interest set out in charity law were recognised or managed appropriately.  Not only that but they also found that the way in which the decision on the proceeds of the fundraising event was taken breached charity trustee duties and contravened the requirements of the charity’s governing document.

 

How did the charity fall foul of OSCR?  Let me remind you that at the time The Rangers Football Club went into liquidation, the Rangers Charity Foundation had three trustees:

 

  • Craig Whyte
  • Martin Bain
  • Jacqueline Gourlay

 

Or, to use OSCR’s terminology:

 

  • Trustee A
  • Trustee B
  • Trustee C

 

However, no trustee meetings had been held since May 2011 and Ms Gourlay and Mr Whyte (alongside Rangers FC staff) had conspired to remove Mr Bain as a trustee from at least October 2011.  According to the Rangers Charity Foundation, Mr Whyte was “removed” as a Trustee on 13 May 2012 although OSCR reports this as:

 

“Trustee A was removed as a director of The Rangers Football Club plc with effect from 1 June 2012. This ended Trustee A’s connection with the Charity.”

 

Eagle-eyed readers will note that – unlike Mr Whyte – Mr Bain’s removal as Chief Executive of Rangers Football Club and the termination of Ms Gourlay’s employment with Rangers Football Club in order to TUPE to Sevco appear to not have ended their connection with the charity (nor does Ms Gourlay’s departure from Sevco).

 

The common theme of course is that all three trustees of Rangers Charity Foundation were employees or directors of Rangers Football Club at one time.

 

So we have a situation where one trustee – Ms Gourlay – was still in post on 15 February 2012 and this sole trustee was also the only effective trustee and had been such since May 2011.

 

Now would it interest you to know that Ms Gourlay worked in the Finance Department at Rangers Football Club?  Would it also interest you to know that Ms Gourlay was also on a hitlist for the sack produced by Mr Whyte for the benefit of the Administrators if we are to believe the revelations of @CharlotteFakes?

 

Would it also interest you to know that Ms Gourlay – and Ms Gourlay alone – took the decision to assign the rights for the AC Milan game to the football club?  In other words, Ms Gourlay – an employee of Rangers FC, under pressure and fearing for her job – assigned over to The Rangers Football Club plc the rights to all profits less 10% without actually seeking the prior agreement of the other Trustees.  Conflict of interest?  You bet your arse it is!

 

Strangely, OSCR state that:

 

“Trustee B [Bain] subsequently advised OSCR that Trustee C [Gourlay] had afforded the utmost scrutiny and diligence to the Charity’s affairs and that Trustee C had acted on behalf of Trustee B throughout the process.”

Yes, that’s right: Trustee B who was being forcibly removed by Trustee C assured OSCR that Trustee C was acting on his behalf.  Silly me, I thought Trustees acted on behalf of the charity and not each other!

 

Regular readers will also spot the inconsistencies here because Ms Gourlay wrote to OSCR on 5 March 2012 asserting that she had emailed “fellow trustees advising them of [the assignation] and other administrative matters on 27 February.”  Ms Gourlay went on to state that only Mr Bain responded and he was in agreement.

 

Well that’s alright then isn’t it?  Two trustees agreed.  Case closed.

 

Except it isn’t because MS Gourlay also stated quite clearly – and this is included within the OSCR report as well as previous posts on this blog – that the decision to assign the rights was taken on or about 21 February 2012.  So our heavily-conflicted (where have we heard that phrase before?) trustee assigned rights on 21 February but did not seek to inform her fellow trustees until 27 February.

 

I am sorry but the notion that a heavily-conflicted trustee is acting on behalf of anyone else is sheer and utter rubbish.  Shove in the evidence above and it is even more preposterous.

 

Of course, Sevconians are jumping up and down with joy that OSCR has seen fit not to take further action and have stated that:

 

“although the decision was a breach of legal duties, it was made in good faith and in the interests of the charity given the risk that otherwise the fundraising event might not have taken place.”

 

For the average Sevconian bigot such as Tinfoil, this is a clear and unambiguous vindication of the Foundation and Rangers Football Club.

 

It is not a vindication of any sort.  It is the equivalent of a crime passionnel where the perpetrator has been let off because – despite clearly committing a crime – there have been extenuating circumstances.  This finding by OSCR is solely based upon evidence produced by Ms Gourlay that, in her view (ie without seeking any legal opinion or advice):

 

  • unless the Administrators had control of the income from the event they were unlikely to agree to the event going ahead;
  • assigning the Charity’s interest in the event to The Rangers Football Club plc (in Administration) would ensure the Administrators would recover costs and satisfy their duty to creditors to derive income from it;
  • the event would still be able to take place and the Charity would still receive some benefit.

 

Quite what the second bullet point had to do with the trustee of a charity is beyond me.  I would have thought that Duff & Phelps were perfectly capable (no laughing, please) of recovering costs without the assistance of the charity.  After all, all income and expenditure was going to be funnelled through the Rangers finance department which was controlled by Duff & Phelps and managed by a certain Ms Gourlay (any relation?)

 

I have posted already that there is a legal block to this little arrangement which any 1st year lawyer could have picked up:  the 1986 Insolvency Act (as amended by the 2002 Enterprise Act) which explicitly states:

 

“A payment may not be made by way of distribution under this paragraph to a creditor of the company who is neither secured nor preferential unless the court gives permission.” [Schedule B1, Paragraph 65(3)]

 

So what Ms Gourlay and OSCR have blissfully ignored is a very basic precept that would have required a visit to the courts to rectify; there was no absolutely way that Duff & Phelps could ever have distributed funding to the charity.  Duff & Phelps knew this and I strongly suspect that Ms Gourlay (as a qualified accountant) knew it too.

 

And let us be clear here, the Rangers Charity Foundation did not receive anything in relation to that match because it is writ large in the charity’s own accounts that the £25,000 management charge was written off against funds which the charity owed to the football club.

 

Nor did it actually receive the 10% profit from the AC Milan game because that is shown as outstanding in the charity’s accounts and no creditor claim was lodged by the charity with the administrators or the liquidators.

 

Those funds have therefore gone forever and will not be recovered because of the decision of one person and one person alone who also happened to be a heavily-conflicted employee of The Rangers Football Club plc (In Administration) who ultimately were the sole beneficiaries of what was meant to be a charity game.

 

That is a scandal and so is the decision by the charity regulator to ignore this and lean on “lessons for the sector” as if this is some kind of widespread but mild misbehaviour by errant children.  This is the misappropriation of over £200,000 from a charity to a private sector business which benefitted no one but the Joint Administrators.

 

Let me finish with another conundrum:

 

If I was the highly-paid CEO of a charity and decided that the charity might fold without me at the helm to bring in income, would I be justified in helping myself to a self-awarded bonus?

 

There is your precedent; OSCR have effectively stated that theft from a charity is okay provided that something goes to charity.

Company law for dummies

Let me make this easy.  Dead easy!

I saw a tweet by truthsayer6 last night in which he stated:

“An incorporated Co is set up specifically to ringfence Club”.

Sheer and utter bunkum!

A company is incorporated specifically to protect the directors’ and investors’ liability; that is why it is actually, and legally, a company limited by guarantee or a company limited by shares.

The former allows directors to limit their liability – in the event of business failure – to a guaranteed and pre-determined amount (usually between £1 and £10 nowadays) whilst the latter allows investors and directors to limit their liability – in the event of business failure – to the amount which they invested in the company.

Therefore when The Rangers Football Club plc died with its failure to exit administration successfully through a CVA, the investors (ignoring any claims against them for fraud, etc) only lost the value of their shares and did not have to put any further funds in to satisfy or repay creditors.  Had that company been limited by guarantee, then they would have had to put in the guaranteed amount, eg £1.

This ability to limit liability goes back to the Limited Liability Act 1855 and the Joint Stock Companies Act 1856 which were really the first modern company laws codifying a simple registration procedure and limited liability.  Companies Acts up to the present Companies Act 2006 have essentially retained the same fundamental features.

Normally commercial companies would form as companies limited by shares whilst charities and not-for-profits would form as companies limited by guarantee.

So let’s take an example…

Let’s say four friends (we’ll call them Moses, Peter, William and Peter) play football in the park each week.  Let’s assume it’s the usual 25 v 25, anyone-in-the-park-can-join-in, next-goal-is-the-winner stuff.  After a while this gets a bit silly so the four friends decide to form a football club to play in the local Sunday league.  They get together a group of players and register the club with the local FA.  Let’s call it Fleshers Haugh Gardes FC.

Now at this point, there is no legal form to the club; it is simply an unincorporated association, a group of people who have come to together to play football.  There is no need to have legal form; they don’t charge an entry fee to watch games because they play on the local park and the players chuck in an agreed subscription of a couple of quid each week to cover kit purchase, laundry bills, pitch hire and any necessary insurance.

Amazingly Fleshers Haugh Gardes FC turns out to be quite good and they soon begin to attract a crowd of followers.  At first this is the usual group of players’ relatives but then a few work colleagues begin to turn up and then a few more.  So that they start to get a hundred or so people each week.  Playing on the local municipal park, this makes life very difficult.  Besides they are actually pretty good and should be playing at a higher level such as Saturday League.

So the friends decide to find a more permanent and suitable base and like the look of a local piece of greenery which is earmarked for development sometime in the future but is currently lying vacant.  The landlord, however, isn’t about to give the land away for free and wants a rent.  Our four friends do some number-crunching and calculate that if they can attract 100 people paying £2.50 each to watch their 20 home games, they’d be able to afford the £4,000 annual rent and have a wee bit left over.

Only problem is they’re an unincorporated association which means the club doesn’t legally exist.  Furthermore, the four friends realise that if something went disastrously wrong, they would be personally liable.  If the club went bankrupt, for example, the friends might be forced to sell their homes and businesses to repay any debts.

So the solution is to incorporate the club into a limited company.  This will allow the club to trade and sell tickets, rent the ground, buy appropriate insurance cover and, crucially, protect the four friends in the event of something going disastrously wrong.

Our friends sit down with a lawyer who explains to them that they can incorporate into a company limited by shares or a company limited by guarantee.  Or, they can indeed remain as an unincorporated association but, yes, the members would then be personally liable for anything disastrous.

Said lawyer explains that a company limited by guarantee is used primarily by charities and other not-for-profit organisations and doesn’t generally distribute profits or have share capital or shareholders.  Instead it has members who act as guarantors, undertaking to contribute a nominal amount (typically very small) in the event of the winding up of the company, and recycles profits back into the company.  Perfect for a small football team playing in a local league with no grand ambitions.

The lawyer further explains that if Fleshers Haugh Gardes FC is really successful and makes a profit, then the founders could pay that profit out in the form of a dividend to the shareholders if they are incorporated as a company limited by shares.  The founders are not sure about this as they just want to play football but they’ve brought along a new member (let’s call him Tom) who is willing to stump up the £4,000 advance rent.  Tom explains that he could inject £4,000 as initial capital for, say, 50% of the shares and rather than be repaid on commercial or even soft loan terms, he could be repaid through the profits.  That way the risk to the club is minimised.

Everyone agrees a company limited by shares is a jolly good way to proceed so the lawyer draws up the memorandum & articles of association with five shareholders (Moses, Peter, William, Peter and Tom) and registers The Fleshers Haugh Gardes Football Club Ltd with Companies House; hey presto, the club has incorporated to become the company.

Time passes and Fleshers Haugh Gardes Football Club is very successful on and off the pitch with thousands turning up each week to watch them.  The founders have passed on and their shares have been bought and sold a number of times but it is still The Fleshers Haugh Gardes Football Club Ltd.  The same club started by our four friends:  Moses, Peter, William and Peter.

But now a new challenge has arisen from abroad and the company needs to raise further funds to allow it to compete in this international market.  So the directors decide to float the company on the stock market, become a public listed company and allow ordinary fans and rich investors to buy shares and inject fresh capital into the club.

So the club that became a private company limited by shares has become a public company limited by shares.  It’s still the same club founded all those years ago by our gallant pioneers; the only difference now is that anyone can buy a little piece of the club simply by buying a plc share.

Sadly, however, the gallant pioneers’ successors weren’t so prudent or capable and The Fleshers Haugh Grades FC plc suddenly found itself in financial trouble because its expenditure vastly outstripped its income.  On top of this, The Fleshers Haugh Gardes FC plc had been a bit naughty and employed some rather dubious financial arrangements in order to be able to compete with the international competition.

This all came to a head and the company found itself placed in administration.  Sadly, its debts were so great that a CVA could not be agreed and the company was liquidated; the club founded by our gallant pioneers that became a private limited company and then a public limited company was no more.

And that, as they say, is that.

AC Milan Foundation

I am happy to report and clarify that Scotzine has confirmed that AC Milan Foundation did in fact receive their £100,000 share from the Rangers Legends match. I will see if I can write more on this later.

Breaking news

For the benefit of scotzine, this is the original article which was put together by corsica and I on 28 February 2012 and which was posted at the time on rangerstaxcase:

“The Rangers Charity Foundation is a registered charitable trust (SC033287). It is a separate legal entity from RFC plc and is not in administration.

Current trustees are Craig Whyte (Chair), Martin Bain, and Jacqueline Gourlay. John Grieg is honorary president. Mr Whyte and Mr Bain are currently locked in a rather acrimonious legal battle and are therefore unlikely to have met since Mr Bain was dismissed from his post as Chief Executive of Rangers Football Club in May 2011.

All charities must apply funds charitably and only according to their governing instrument which sets out what they can and cannot do and how they can do this. Principally this is set out in the clauses dealing with Objects, Purposes and Powers:

• The OBJECTS of Rangers Charity Foundation are: The Trustees shall hold the Trust Fund and the income of it to pay and apply the same to or for the benefit of or in furtherance of such purposes, objects or institutions charitable in law and in such proportions and manner as the Trustees shall think fit. In exercising their discretion in terms of this Clause the Trustees shall give primary consideration to the wishes of those persons who gift or lend funds to the Foundation but this proviso shall impose no binding obligation on the Trustees.
• The PURPOSES of Rangers Charity Foundation are: Prevention or Relief of Poverty; Advancement of Education; Advancement of Health; Advancement of Citizenship or Community Development; Promotion of Equality and Diversity; Relief of Those in Need By Reason of Age, Ill Health, Disability, Financial Hardship or Other Disadvantage.

The Rangers Charity Foundation announced some time ago that a football match would be held between a team of Rangers Legends and a team of AC Milan Legends in order to raise funds for the Rangers Charity Foundation and the AC Milan Foundation. The match is due to take place in Glasgow on 30 March 2012.

It was confirmed today (28 February 2012) that the match will still take place but that revenue from the match would now be split between Rangers Football Club, the Rangers Charity Foundation and the AC Milan Foundation with the Rangers Charity Foundation foregoing “the majority of its share of the proceeds”. In announcing this, Connal Cochrane, Manager of the Rangers Charity Foundation, said: “The Club and the Rangers fans have been tremendous to the Foundation over the last 10 years and now it is our turn to stand alongside them and Step Up For Rangers. The Rangers Charity Foundation suggested the Club should now benefit from the match and we were delighted that the AC Milan Foundation agreed.”

Is this not, in fact, illegal under charity law as well as being outwith the objects and powers of the Rangers Charity Foundation because it amounts to a donation from the Foundation to a commercial entity which is not charitable and those funds will be applied for purposes which are not charitable?

This situation needs investigating as it raises a number of questions:

1. Have there been any proper/quorate trustee meetings since May 2011? As alluded to in my second paragraph above, I am concerned that there has been no proper governance at the Foundation since May 2011 with only two trustees in effective control of the Foundation.
2. Who is actually administering and organising the match? Is it the football club or the charity? Statements by the charity would suggest that the game has been organised by the charity itself (albeit they may use RFC staff for practical purposes). If so then it would be perfectly reasonable for the charity to deduct costs from income and pay these over to the football club BUT these costs would need to be legitimately incurred and could not be artificially inflated.
3. Has the charity sought specialist advice on taxation issues because of the potential VAT liability or indeed, the potential to reclaim Gift Aid which would allow them to reclaim 25% from HMRC? Events such as are notoriously difficult from a taxation point of view and I am concerned that the charity has not thought through all of the implications.
4. Who made the decision to donate charity funds to RFC plc (a commercial entity and not a body that is charitable in law)? If it was the administrators of RFC plc, RFC plc staff or Foundation staff then they have no legal powers to do so. If it was the trustees then this must be a collective decision (are they even talking to each other?) and cannot be decided by a single trustee.
5. Donation of charitable funds to a commercial company – irrespective of the economic circumstances in which it finds itself – is not charitable in law and is in any case completely against the Objects and Powers of the charity as set out above. Did trustees take legal advice on this?”

I don’t mind others picking this story up and running with it because it needs wider dissemination and investigation, but please let’s not rewrite history about who broke what and when, eh?

Facts, just facts.

1. DEFAMATION

Let’s start with “defamation”, a word which has been banded about a lot by some (ignoring completely of course the possibility that in accusing me of defamation, they are possibly committing defamation themselves as well as ignoring perhaps some of their own previous statements such as: “@Club12Official He’s been trying to work his ticket to EPL for months. New representation employed to get it done. This is a chance”).

There is no single comprehensive definition of what is defamatory although the courts would almost certainly recognise any material which:

  • Is to a person’s discredit.
  • Tends to lower him or her in the estimation of others.
  • Causes him or her to be shunned or avoided.
  • Causes him or her to be exposed to hatred, ridicule or contempt.

For a statement to be defamatory the imputation must tend to lower the claimant in the estimation of right-thinking members of society generally. Even if the words damage a person in the eyes of a section of society or the community, they are not defamatory unless they amount to a disparagement of the reputation in the eyes of right-thinking people generally.

A statement that amounts to an insult or is mere vulgar abuse is not defamatory.  This is because the words do not convey a defamatory meaning to those who heard them (simple abuse is unlikely to cause real damage to a reputation).

It’s at this point, of course, when my detractors have stopped reading believing the case to be open and shut.  However, they should be aware that there are very good defences against a defamation claim which would apply in this case (should anyone ever bring a claim against me):

a. Justification (Truth)

It is a complete defence to an action for defamation to prove that the defamatory statement is substantially true.  It is not necessary for a defendant to show that there was a public interest in publication and it does not matter whether he or she acted maliciously.

A defendant is not required to prove that every allegation is true.  The Defamation Act 1952 provides that where the words complained of contain two or more distinct allegations a defence of justification can still succeed if the words not proved to be true do not materially injure the claimant’s reputation having regard to the imputations which are proved true.

b. Fair Comment

If a defendant can prove that the defamatory statement is an expression of opinion on a matter of public interest and not a statement of fact, he or she can rely on the defence of fair comment.

The courts have said that whenever a matter is such as to affect people at large, so that they may be legitimately interested in, or concerned at, what is going on or what may happen to them or to others, then it is a matter of public interest on which everyone is entitled to make fair comment.

The comment must be based on true facts which are either contained in the publication or are sufficiently referred to.  It is for the defendant to prove that the underlying facts are true. If he or she is unable to do so, then the defence will fail.  As with justification, the defendant does not to have to prove the truth of every fact provided the comment was fair in relation to those facts which are proved.

Fair does not mean reasonable, but signifies the absence of malice.  The views expressed can be exaggerated, obstinate or prejudiced, provided they are honestly held.

c. Privilege

If untrue defamatory allegations are published on an occasion of privilege, they will be protected from a claim for defamation.  Although the law of defamation exists to protect reputations, it is recognised that in particular situations it is to the benefit of society generally for people to be able to communicate without the fear of being sued for defamation.  This is so despite the risk that a person’s reputation will be damaged and they will not be able to restore it by bringing a claim for defamation.

2. PERSONA

Despite what several people think and have tried to reveal on twitter (and perhaps elsewhere), my name is not Kevin.

I understand where they might have got this impression, however, they are wrong.  I tweeted at 1am on 14 June 2013 that I had finished writing a post on this blog (“conflicting interests”) but could not get the links/images to work.  This was followed by another tweet at 8.31am: “Any wordpress whizz kids out there? Have embedded pics from PDFs & emails into blog text on word but it won’t paste into wordpress. Help!”  A friend offered to help and put the various items on the blog for me embedded for the most part in Word documents.  In doing so, they forgot to remove IP data that linked it to them.

That friend is neither the owner nor author of this blog.  I regret very much that he and his family have been dragged into this and I would stress that they are innocent and to suggest or state otherwise would be a gross falsehood.

3. DEFENCE

Finally, turning to the defamation claims made against me by self-appointed spokespersons (and let’s be absolutely clear here, no claim of defamation has been made against me by anyone at The Rangers Football Club plc (IA), Sevco, the Rangers Charity Foundation or OSCR all of whom could easily contact me, having both my mobile phone number and email address).

There is no doubt that statements which I have made on this blog and the linked twitter account fall within the grounds recognised by the courts:

  • Is to a person’s discredit.
  • Tends to lower him or her in the estimation of others.
  • Causes him or her to be shunned or avoided.
  • Causes him or her to be exposed to hatred, ridicule or contempt.

However, I feel completely comfortable that I would have an absolute defence under all three defences outlined above as well as a conditional defence through Qualified Privilege under the Defamation Act 1996.  This is because my articles and statements have been based completely on the following facts none of which have been denied or refuted and all of which are backed up by evidence which is contained in this blog.

1. Was there a charity game organised between Rangers Legends & AC Milan Glorie? Yes.
2. Was all of the profit from that game originally designated to go to charity? Yes.
3. Did the Rangers Charity Foundation come to an arrangement with RFCplc (IA) to divert 90% of the profit from that game (less £80-£100k) to RFC plc (IA)? Yes.
4. Was that decision made lawfully and/or in line with good practice? No.
5. Should legal advice have been taken by the Foundation over the variation to that game? Yes.
6. Was legal advice taken? No.
7. Was it illegal for The Rangers Football Club plc (In Administration) to donate money to the Rangers Charity Foundation and/or AC Milan Glorie? Yes.
8. Was it illegal for the Rangers Charity Foundation to donate money to The Rangers Football Club plc (In Administration)? Yes.
9. Did that game generate c£537,577 in income? Yes.
10. Did that game generate a net profit of £358,940? Yes.
11. Did the Rangers Charity Foundation receive any money from that game? No.
12. Did AC Milan Glorie receive any money from that game? There is no evidence they did.
13. Was there a charity game organised between Rangers Legends & MUFC Legends? Yes.
14. Was income from that game about £418,681? Yes.
15. Were costs from that game c£178,637 thus leaving a profit of £240,044? Yes, based on reasonable precedent.
16. Was £240,044 donated to charity? No.
17. Was £75,000 donated to charity? Yes.
18. Was the remaining balance of profit (c£165,044) retained by Sevco? Yes.
19. Were there any trustee meetings of the Rangers Charity Foundation from May 2011 until January 2013? No.
20. Was the sole active trustee of the Rangers Charity Foundation an employee of The Rangers Football Club plc (IA) and then Sevco? Yes.
21. Is that a conflict of interest. Yes.
22. Did that sole trustee have power to remove other trustees? No.
23. Were other trustees removed or encouraged to resign? Yes.
24. Did Ally McCoist lead a team of fundraisers on a white water adventure to raise funds for the Rangers Charity Foundation? Yes.
25. Did they raise c£15,633? Yes, on the face of all the evidence.
26. Were total costs of the adventure about £39,000? Yes, based on available evidence & reasonable quote.
27. Did the Rangers Charity Foundation have appropriate risk management & insurance policies in place for that adventure? There is no evidence they did & without a lawfully constituted board, they could not and should not have entered into legally-binding contracts of this type.
28. Did the white water adventure coincide with the North American Rangers Supporters Association annual convention? Yes.
29. Have the two previous white water adventures undertaken by or on behalf of the Rangers Charity Foundation coincided with the North American Rangers Supporters Association annual convention? It would appear so from the evidence available.
30. Should The Rangers Charity Foundation have lodged a creditor’s claim with Duff & Phelps? Yes.
31. Did The Rangers Charity Foundation lodge a creditor’s claim with Duff & Phelps? No.

Not one single fact has been twisted or distorted.  Not one single fact has been made up.  And that’s a fact!

 

 

In putting this article together, I am indebted to the excellent Liberty and their Human Rights Act guide which is available at www.yourrights.org.uk.  If you are tweeting and/or blogging and have not done so already, I strongly recommend you read it.

conflicting interests

This is going to be quite a long post (sorry) because I’ve been away on work and then several things have literally all happened at once, including receipt of the Foundation’s latest accounts and several documents and correspondence involving the Foundation and OSCR.

I’ll deal with 4 issues:

  • Governance of the Trust
  • The Legends game against AC Milan Glorie
  • The Legends game against Manchester United
  • Ally’s Idaho Challenge

FIRSTLY, A QUICK RECAP (again)…

The Rangers Charity Foundation is a registered charitable trust (SC033287). The Foundation was established as a charitable Trust by “The Rangers Football Club plc” [NB: this is important] in June 2002 with David Murray, Martin Bain and Andrew Dickson as the initial trustees. The settlor (“The Rangers Football Club plc”) retained the right to appoint future trustees but – curiously – did not retain the right to remove trustees [again, this is important].

It was a separate legal entity from RFC plc; is a separate legal entity from Sevco; and, has never been in administration. Nor has it ever been under the control of Duff & Phelps or BDO. Indeed, only the Trustees have ever had control over its affairs.

All charities must apply funds charitably and only according to their governing instrument which sets out what they can and cannot do and how they can do this. Principally this is set out in the clauses dealing with Objects, Purposes and Powers:

• The OBJECTS of Rangers Charity Foundation are: The Trustees shall hold the Trust Fund and the income of it to pay and apply the same to or for the benefit of or in furtherance of such purposes, objects or institutions charitable in law and in such proportions and manner as the Trustees shall think fit. In exercising their discretion in terms of this Clause the Trustees shall give primary consideration to the wishes of those persons who gift or lend funds to the Foundation but this proviso shall impose no binding obligation on the Trustees.

• The PURPOSES of Rangers Charity Foundation are: Prevention or Relief of Poverty; Advancement of Education; Advancement of Health; Advancement of Citizenship or Community Development; Promotion of Equality and Diversity; Relief of Those in Need By Reason of Age, Ill Health, Disability, Financial Hardship or Other Disadvantage.

The Trust Deed explicitly states that “The Chairman of the Foundation will be the Chairman of The Rangers Football Club plc, and his successors in office.”

1. GOVERNANCE

As we all know Craig Whyte bought Rangers Football Club in May 2011. As a result he became the Chair of the Foundation alongside two existing trustees: Martin Bain and Jacqueline Gourlay. Mr Bain was the Chief Executive of Rangers whilst Ms Gourlay was a Finance Officer with Rangers and is currently Head of Business Management at Sevco.

As we all also know Mr Bain and Mr Whyte had a disagreement and Mr Bain was sacked almost as soon as Mr Whyte took over (I have received information alleging that Mr Whyte terminated Mr Bain’s employment for amongst other things, embezzlement of charitable funds but have no evidence to confirm or deny this either way). Mr Bain was not however removed from and did not resign his position as a trustee with the Foundation until 4 April 2012.

We also know, of course, that The Rangers Football Club plc entered administration on 14 February 2012 and, upon failing to exit administration successfully via a CVA, was placed in the hands of receivers to be liquidated.

The Foundation’s own accounts prove that Craig Whyte was “removed” as a Trustee on 13 May 2012 which, following Mr Bain’s resignation, left only Ms Gourlay as the sole Trustee (no other Trustee has been appointed since):

RCF 2012 accounts_Legal & Administrative Information_Document A

Looking at Mr Bain first of all, I have a copy of correspondence dated 21-25 October 2011 involving Craig Whyte, Ali Russell, Gary Whithey, Jacqueline Gourlay and Douglas Connell of Turcan Connell who are the Foundation’s legal advisers. It starts with an email from Mr Connell to Ms Gourlay in which he states:

“I was glad to speak to you this afternoon about the governance arrangements which are in place at The Rangers Charity Foundation.

As I explained to you, in the absence of the regulations – which I understand have not been adopted by the charity – there are no fixed rotation provisions applying to the charity trustees and it is therefore quite tricky to remove a trustee from the charity. It is possible that, in the last resort, there might be an application to the Court to seek a trustee’s removal. Such an application would need to be to the Court of Session and there would need to be clear grounds for removal before the Court will grant an application. A conflict of interest which was not envisaged at the outset by the person creating the trust (in this case, Rangers Football Club) can be grounds for removal, but the Court tends to apply its powers of removal sparingly. In some cases, the Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator (OSCR) can apply to the Court of Session for the removal of a trustee in closely defined circumstances, including if there has been misconduct, or if it is necessary or desirable for protecting the charity’s property or for securing its charitable objects. We would need to approach either possible Court action with some care should we reach that stage. I expect that the charity will wish to avoid a court action if at all possible.

I suggest that the current governance issue should be dealt with step by step, and I suggest that the first step is to write formally to Martin Bain asking whether he feels that he would like to stand down as a trustee in all the circumstances. I suggest that the wording below might be used for the purposes of a letter from you to Mr Bain, and I also attach a document which I think you ought to send to Mr Bain along with your letter. How Mr Bain responds to your letter will then determine what steps, if any, might be required thereafter.

Dear Martin

We have been reviewing the governance arrangements for The Rangers Charity Foundation. In all the circumstances, it may be that you feel that you would like to stand down as a charity trustee. If that is the case, could I ask you please to sign the accompanying letter and return it to me?

Yours sincerely

I hope that this is helpful and please let me know if you need anything else from me for the time being.”

Further emails between Messrs Whyte, Whithey, Russell and Ms Gourlay seek to refine the wording of the letter to Mr Bain and confirm that it should be sent which it was on 25 October 2011 although without Mr Whithey’s suggested amendment because that arrived after the letter had already been sent:

“in the circumstances, you should step down as a trustee of the charity. Please sign the accompanying letter and return it to me”

It appears therefore that a Trustee of the Foundation was scheming with the Chair and others outwith the Foundation to forcibly remove a Trustee even though there did not appear to be any grounds to remove that Trustee nor indeed any mechanism to do so.

In the end, Mr Bain resigned on 4 April 2012 (I am somewhat bemused why it took so long for this to happen).

Turning to Mr Whyte, I sadly do not have (as yet) any correspondence relating to his removal as a Trustee but there is no doubt that he was removed. The question, however, is by whom? Given the advice from Mr Connell, who could possibly remove him?

Furthermore, in the absence of any provision saying otherwise, under Trust law, the Foundation must have a minimum of three Trustees and would need to have a minimum of three to be quorate. As Mr Bain had already resigned, that meant only two trustees remained; one of whom would be highly unlikely to vote for their own removal.

So, I ask again, how could Mr Whyte be removed as a Trustee and by whom?

Was another Trustee scheming again? Did Duff & Phelps as administrators of The Rangers Football Club plc step in as Chair and, alongside Ms Gourlay, forcibly remove Mr Whyte? Did OSCR step in and remove him?

It surely couldn’t be the latter as they are still investigating the Foundation so can’t have found anyone guilty yet and, in any case, have not issued any notice of their intention to remove Mr Whyte.

Nor could it possibly be Duff & Phelps since their appointment as trustee would be recorded with OSCR and within the Foundation’s own accounts and annual report. Nor could it be that additional trustees were appointed by The Rangers Football Club plc (In Administration) since these too would be recorded with OSCR and within the Foundation’s accounts and annual report.

Eagle-eyed readers will have noticed, of course, that from May 2011 until April 2012, both Mr Whyte and Mr Bain remained as Trustees and, as I have previously postulated, this must have made for interesting Foundation board meetings given their acrimonious relationship.

Thankfully, I have correspondence between Ms Gourlay and OSCR from 5 March 2012:

Gourlay to Anderson 05mar12_page 1_Document B

In this letter Ms Gourlay confirms that “With regard to Trustees meetings since May 2011 I can confirm that none have taken place.”

So, we have a charitable Trust which has not held a board meeting since May 2011 and has only one effective Trustee who is also a salaried employee of The Rangers Football Club plc. That is, of course, incredibly important when we turn to look at the AC Milan Glorie game and, quite frankly, the worst conflict of interest I have seen since I investigated a charity where the founder was the Treasurer, his best friend the Chair, and his wife (who was paid 33% of the charity’s turnover) was the CEO.

Anyway, I digress.

On to the AC Milan Glorie match, but before I do so, let me raise a simple question which I have previously posted on twitter: if the organisation is improperly and unlawfully constituted, how can any decision or action taken be deemed to be lawful or, indeed, properly taken? Bearing in mind that the Foundation would have had to have employer’s and public liability insurance just for starters and that those policies would need to have been properly and legally executed, would any event held by or on behalf of the Foundation be covered?

2. AC MILAN GLORIE

In January 2012, the Foundation announced plans to hold a glamour friendly at Ibrox between a team of Rangers Legends and a team of AC Milan legends on 30 March 2012. Tickets were to be priced at £10 for adults and £5 for concessions and children. All funds raised would be split between the Rangers Charity Foundation and the AC Milan Foundation.

Following The Rangers FC’s plunge into administration, it was announced by Rangers FC (NB: not the Foundation) that the friendly would still go ahead but at a higher price of £12 and £6 and crucially with “revenue from the match being split between the Club, the Rangers Charity Foundation and the AC Milan Foundation.” This latest announcement even went so far as to say that “Rangers Charity Foundation has offered to forego the majority of its share of the proceeds…and funds raised will help secure the future of the Rangers, which is vital at this time.”

Now, I know that certain people in Sevconia refuse to believe that the match was ever a charity fundraising event or organised by the Foundation, but this is an extract from Ms Gourlay’s letter of 5 March 2012 to Laura Anderson, Head of Inquiry & Investigation at OSCR:

Gourlay to Anderson 05mar12_page 2_Document C

Note the penultimate sentence, Mr Graham: “The agreement allows for…the Foundation retaining the remainder of the profit from the Event”. No wishy-washy nonsense here, it’s pretty straightforward; the primary purpose of the event was to raise money for the Foundation and ALL the profit (less what was due to AC Milan) would be going to the Rangers Charity Foundation. There is no provision for any profit to be retained by the Club and, in fact, that very same letter from Ms Gourlay to Ms Anderson also includes the following gem:

Gourlay to Olverton 02feb12_Document D

So not only was there to be no profit to the Club but all “income and costs relating to the match will be treated as they were income and costs of the Rangers Charity Foundation including the appropriate VAT treatment” (VAT treatment is important because, had it been a charity fundraising event then no VAT would have been payable on the ticket prices thus saving 20%).

We know that the game proceeded on 30 March 2012 with an attendance of 47,000. I had originally stated that the match had raised £450,000 which was split as follows:

£280,000 for the club

£170,000 split between the Rangers Charity Foundation and AC Milan Foundation.

This was based upon information in the media and on the RFC(IA) website.

Thankfully the Foundation can correct me because on 27 February 2012 Ms Gourlay wrote to Paul Clark of Duff & Phelps to assign the match contract to the Club “on the basis that the Foundation receives 10% of the net profit from the event” whilst AC Milan Glorie would receive a donation of “no less than £80,000” and a further £20,000 if the match generated a profit greater than £250,000:

Gourlay to Clark 27feb12_page 1_Document E

Let’s just remind ourselves that that is a charitable Trust – which has not held a board meeting since May 2011 and has only one effective Trustee who is also a salaried employee of The Rangers Football Club plc – assigning over to The Rangers Football Club plc the rights to all profits less 10% plus £80,000 or £100,000. And let’s also not forget that The Rangers Football Club plc was already going to be paid its costs from the income.

Thankfully there are Sevconians to keep me on the straight and narrow. What about VAT? What about costs? What about fees? They say.

Well, that helpful Ms Gourlay set out the actual income and costs in some detail and the original spreadsheet can be found here:

AC Milan Glorie Pricing Model and PL 290212_original_Document F

By inserting 47,000 in the attendance field we can calculate exactly how much money was generated. The relevant cell (B8) can be found in the last worksheet which is labelled ‘£12 40K’. Type in 47000, and then go back to the P&L worksheet. [Postscript: I’ve removed excel version from original edit of this post as someone tried to hack it. Bona fide journalists/investigative reporters are welcome to contact me for the original file.]

Hey presto! Income has risen to £537,577 whilst total profit has risen to £358,940. The Rangers Charity Foundation donation also increases – as it is % based – to £35,894 whilst the AC Milan donation remains fixed at £100,000 in line with the agreed contract. Net profit to Rangers Football Club (In Administration) also rises to £223,046.

Yes, folks, The Rangers Football Club plc (In Administration) walked away with £223,046 profit that should have gone to charity. That is net of costs which were paid to the Club and VAT.

Pure, bottom line, filthy profit! A deal that Gordon Gekko would be proud of.

But at least the Rangers Charity Foundation got something out of it, I hear you say. Except it didn’t, because the Foundation’s accounts to 30 June 2012 clearly state that that 10% profit that it should have received was not paid:

RCF 2012 accounts_Related Party Transactions_Document G

Well what about AC Milan Glorie surely they received their share? After all, their £80,000 donation was to be paid within 14 working days of the match with the £20,000 balance (if payable) due no later than 11 June 2012. Sadly, AC Milan Glorie’s representatives refused to be drawn on the matter when contacted. Instead, I turned to the Duff & Phelps creditors report of 10 July 2012 since this rather helpfully provides a detailed receipts and payment account:

D&P Creditors Report 10jul12_Receipts & Payments Account_Document H

Bizarrely, whilst I can find “Charity Match Costs” of £153,152 (which would equate within a reasonable level of tolerance to the figures supplied by Ms Gourlay to OSCR less £20,000 travel costs for AC Milan), I cannot find any reference to any payments to AC Milan Glorie.

Perhaps Duff & Phelps can clear this up, but there does now appear to be a very strong suspicion that AC Milan Glorie didn’t receive any funds either which would mean that The Rangers Football Club plc (In Administration) kept the entire £358,940 profit to itself as well as, of course, paying its costs.

In other words, a commercial football club which had driven itself to bankruptcy was deemed to be a more deserving cause and received every single penny generated by a football match that should have raised £360,000 for charity.

Let’s be absolutely clear here: The Rangers Football Club plc (In Administration) contrived – with the acquiescence, approval or assistance of the Rangers Charity Foundation – to divert £358,940 to itself that should have been due to the Foundation and the AC Milan charity.

Of course, had the Rangers Charity Foundation taken proper professional advice then it might have foreseen this turn of events because The Rangers Football Club plc (In Administration) were legally prohibited from donating any funds to charity under the 1986 Insolvency Act (as amended by the 2002 Enterprise Act) which explicitly states:

A payment may not be made by way of distribution under this paragraph to a creditor of the company who is neither secured nor preferential unless the court gives permission.” [Schedule B1, Paragraph 65(3)]

We have already established that the Foundation may only apply funds and assets for the charitable purposes set out in their governing document. So:

  • If The Rangers Football Club plc (In Administration) ran the event and donated money to the Rangers Charity Foundation and/or AC Milan Glorie, it was in breach of insolvency law.
  • If the Rangers Charity Foundation ran the event and donated money to The Rangers Football Club plc (In Administration), it was in breach of charity law.

What an interesting conundrum! Yet one that would have easily been identified and rectified had the Foundation taken professional advice. Perhaps it did?

Here’s Ms Gourlay again, this time in an email to Jennifer Keenlyside of OSCR on 6 March 2012 at 17.25:

No professional advice was sought on the assignation as stated, it was believed to be the best course of action given that the only other identified option was cancellation.”

Oh dear, well perhaps she at least discussed it in a board meeting with her fellow trustees? Oh wait, no board meetings! Doh!

Well, maybe she telephoned or sent an email? Let’s go back to her letter to Ms Anderson of 5 March 2012:

Gourlay to Anderson 05mar12_page 4_Document I

Well that’s okay then, isn’t it? Agreement from Mr Bain. Except, Mr Bain was asked to resign as a Trustee in October 2011 and Ms Gourlay in the same letter states:

Rather than risk the cancellation of the even the decision was made on or around 21 February to vary the arrangements surrounding the Event

Let’s just remind ourselves yet again that this is a charitable Trust – which has not held a board meeting since May 2011 and has only one effective Trustee who is also a salaried employee of The Rangers Football Club plc – where a single Trustee has assigned over to The Rangers Football Club plc the rights to all profits less 10% plus £80,000 – £100,000 without actually seeking the prior agreement of the other Trustees.

3. MANCHESTER UNITED

On 6 May 2013, Rangers Legends played a football match at Ibrox against Manchester United Legends in front of a crowd of 23,177 in order to raise funds for UNICEF and the Rangers Charity Foundation.

Tickets for this event were priced at £17 adults, £5 kids, £13 concessions and £40 families. Using Ms Gourlay’s rather helpful spreadsheet, I calculate that total income was £418,681.

Readers will no doubt recall that Charles Green loudly told us on several occasions that he had slashed costs since Sevco took over Ibrox. I, however, will stick to Ms Gourlay’s model just to be cautious and keep costs at £178,637 thus leaving a profit (net of VAT) of £240,044.

Well that’s a good amount for the charities, isn’t it? Except it isn’t. You see only £75,000 actually went to charity.

So what has happened to the remaining £165,044 profit?

It didn’t go south to Manchester as neither Manchester United nor the Manchester United Foundation received a penny. Regrettably, I am not allowed to publish the letter which I received from John Shiels, the Chief Executive of the Manchester United Foundation, but I can say that MUFC obtained the right to broadcast the match on MUTV in return for sanctioning the match and the use of MUFC copyright and that participants received a small fee for taking part.  I should also add that there is absolutely no suggestion of any impropriety on the part of either Manchester United FC or The Manchester United Foundation.

So I ask again, where has the £165,044 gone? And remember this is pure profit, Sevco have already deducted their costs.

Once again, we have to ask if the Rangers Charity Foundation has been a front for a money-making exercise by a football club (and so soon after Milangate)?

Now, let’s be clear, in this particular case there is no evidence of financial impropriety or illegality, however, it absolutely stinks ethically and morally to the extent that I would say unequivocally it amounts to theft.

Of course, it cannot be easy given that the Rangers Charity Foundation is rudderless with only one trustee (contrary to charity law) who also happens to be employed in the Sevco financial department. Maybe, just maybe, she got her figures muddled and it’ll all be sorted at year’s end?

To get to the bottom of this, I emailed the following questions to the Sevco Press Office and Connal Cochrane the Rangers Charity Foundation Manager:

A. The Legends match

1. Who originally proposed the charity game between RFC Legends and MUFC Legends?

2. Who was responsible for its organisation and administration?

3. Who – within the Rangers Charity Foundation –took the legal decision to participate in this match and why? Was legal advice sought and taken as to the legality of this given that only one trustee is in place and she is also an employee of the related party which appears to have been the major benefactor from the match?

4. Was VAT charged on ticket prices? If so, was legal advice sought on this particular point?

5. Was any fee paid by or to anyone associated with either RFC or MUFC Legends for appearing at and/or participating in the match? If so, how much was paid?

6. Why was the match publicised as a “charity” match with “proceeds” going to RCF and UNICEF if only a fixed amount was to be donated and any surplus above this was being kept by the football club?

7. Can you provide a detailed breakdown of income and expenditure for this match (frankly, I struggle to see how an estimated minimum income of £350,000 only generated charitable funds of £75,000)? If not, can you confirm how much funds were retained by Rangers FC as expenses and how these were calculated?

8. How much funding was donated to RCF and how much was donated to UNICEF as a result of the match?

9. Can you confirm that the donated funds have now been paid to each charity?

B. The Gala Dinner

10. Who was responsible for the organisation and administration of the gala dinner held the same evening as the Legends game?

11. Was VAT charged on ticket prices for the gala dinner?

12. Was any fee paid by or to anyone associated with either RFC or MUFC Legends for appearing at and/or participating in the dinner? If so, how much was paid?

13. Who – within the Rangers Charity Foundation –took the legal decision to participate in this Dinner and why? Was legal advice sought and taken as to the legality of this given that only one trustee is in place and she is also an employee of the related party which appears to have been the major benefactor from the match?

14. Can you provide a detailed breakdown of income and expenditure for this Dinner and associated events (raffle, auction, etc)?

15. Can you confirm how much funds were retained by Rangers FC or any other organiser as expenses from the Dinner and how these were calculated (assuming the Club or another body organised this)?

C. Generally

16. Were MUFC or MU Foundation ever told at any point by Rangers Football Club or the Rangers Charitable Foundation that Rangers FC would recover its costs and only £75,000 would be raised for charity with any funds over and above this retained as profit by Rangers FC?

17. Can you confirm how much in-kind support was provided by Rangers FC to the organisation and administration of the game, dinner and associated events?

At 16.52 that same day, I received the following response:

“Dear Sir/Madam

Following your recent emails I would be grateful if you could please identify yourself and, in such circumstances, the Rangers Charity Foundation would be more than happy to respond in a constructive manner.

Regards

Connal Cochrane

Manager, Rangers Charity Foundation”

At 17.09, I replied politely declining to identify myself. I then received an immediate automatic reply stating that Mr Cochrane was on annual leave until 10 June.

On 10 Jun 2013, at 11:31, Rangers Charity wrote:

Dear Sir/Madam

 Further to your recent emails I can confirm that the Rangers Charity Foundation has responded to your original request (dated 24 May 2013) and provided the information to you according to our statutory obligations. We do not intend to respond to your additional requests.

Regards

Rangers Charity Foundation”

I responded the same day with another email:

“Dear Sir/Madam

 Might I refer you to Connal Cochrane’s email to me on 24 May 2013 at 16.52 in which he states:

 “if you could please identify yourself and, in such circumstances, the Rangers Charity Foundation would be more than happy to respond in a constructive manner.”

 So, for the avoidance of doubt, you will answer my enquiries if I identify myself?

 Kind regards, Alzipratu”

Since then, nothing. It really is a strange way for a charity to behave, even one so badly managed as the Rangers Charity Foundation.

4. ALLY’S IDAHO CHALLENGE

In researching the Foundation and the Manchester United Legends game in particular, I came across an article on the Sevco website announcing that Ally McCoist would be leading a team of supporters between 23 and 28 May 2013 navigating some white water rapids in Idaho (the River Salmon) to raise funds for the Rangers Charity Foundation.

Ally’s aim was to raise £10,000.

My interest in this was piqued in the middle of May when I noticed that he had only raised £219 (quite possibly not helped by the Rangers Charity Foundation inadvertently misspelling his Just Giving page on their website).

What I found particularly strange was that the target seemed so low. Mr McCoist is a wealthy man through his footballing and media endeavours as are many of his associates, friends and colleagues. Indeed, I would have anticipated a much higher target to be more appropriate especially when one considers the costs involved in this sort of thing and a similar event involving Walter Smith the preceding year had raised some £69,000. I decided therefore to keep an eye on this.

My curiosity was further raised by a tweet from Ally McCoist’s son on Thursday, 22 May in which he stated that the airline had given away their business class seats because they were late. Business class seats on a fundraising trip? Hmmm…

So I followed the redoubtable Mr McCoist junior and it transpires that he spent 3 days in New York City in a hotel overlooking Times Square. Then he flew out to Denver before catching a connecting flight to Boise, Idaho and then another connection to Salmon, Idaho. Following the rafting, Mr McCoist junior has helpfully informed us that he will be in San Francisco afterwards although it is unclear for how long or if this is part of the charity programme or personal business or even club business as it also happens to be the venue for the North American Rangers Supporters Association annual convention.

A wee friend in the travel agency business did a bit of research for me and priced business class flights at £4,500. A hotel in New York overlooking Times Square would set you back about £300 per night. So that’s at least £5,000.

On top of this, of course, one has to add the cost of the white water rafting. I am reliably informed that the RCF party are participating in a five day experience costing £1,500. So we’ve now got a running total of £6,500 per head.

Anyway, I digress. Eagle-eyed readers will have spotted that I mention both Ally McCoist and his son. They may also have spotted that I mentioned that Mr McCoist is leading a team (6 people I counted, including another son?).

Now, I could be mistaken here but I trawled (yes, it is an obsession) Just Giving and I eventually found three more pages related to Ally’s Idaho Challenge:

  • Richard Calveley – £2,459.93, raised of £5,000.00 target
  • Alastair McCoist – £0.00, raised of £5,000.00 target
  • Lynsey Moore – £2,040.00, raised of £4,000.00 target

(figures correct as of 14 June 2013)

Ally himself has done extremely well, raising £11,133.14 against a target of £10,000 which means that a grand total of £15,633.07 has been raised (and I think Ms Moore and Mr Calveley should at least be applauded for their efforts). But that still leaves a lot of questions unanswered with the most important being; how much did this all cost? If my friend is correct, we are looking at a total cost of about £39,000!

On 24 May 2013, I emailed a series of questions to the Sevconian press office and Connal Cochrane, the Manager of the Rangers Charity Foundation:

  1. How many people are participating in the current Idaho Challenge?
  2. What is the total cost of this event (transport, accommodation, event, etc) and can costs be itemised?
  3. Have any participants been required to put down a bond or other similar guarantee to ensure actual costs are fully recovered as a minimum?
  4. What is the total amount pledged/donated to date?
  5. Have tickets (flights, accommodation, etc) been booked as a group or individually?
  6. Has the foundation sought to purchase the cheapest possible tickets and is it able to evidence this?
  7. What steps has the Foundation taken to ensure that the Challenge will at the very least raise enough funds to cover costs?

I later asked if they could also let me know how they planned to ensure that the insurance policy they’d obviously taken out to protect the rafters was legally binding if it hadn’t actually been legally executed by the board of trustees?

To date, none of these questions have been answered.

And now for the strange bit…I am told that the Manager and Chief Executive have taken part in the White Water Rafting experience over the past three years and that each one has ended coincidentally with the commencement of the North American Rangers Supporters Association annual convention which the Manager and Chief Executive have then attended. Curiouser and curiouser!

A quick update on “conflicting interests”

It has come to my attention today that Ms Jacqueline Gourlay appears to have left the employment of Sevco in January 2013.  I say “appears” because I was told by a lady from the Foundation only 3 weeks ago that she was still employed at Sevco; perhaps she meant that Ms Gourlay was still “employed” as a Trustee of the Foundation?  Either way, please bear this in mind when reading the previous post.

 

The usual tin foil suspect (you and we know who you are) has been spouting his usual nonsense about stolen documents and anonymity.

 

Let me be clear, the documents I received were not stolen; they were willingly given and gratefully received (apart from RCF accounts which took 12 months to obtain).

 

Let me also be clear on anonymity; I have no desire to see my family or my employment affected by neanderthals with a grudge.  I already receive enough abuse on my twitter account without letting thugs and bullies know my real name (in case you’re wondering, I’ve hidden myself behind two false identities and three real identities so good luck finding me).  I have absolutely no problem engaging with anyone who wishes to do so provided they engage in reasoned, reasonable and polite debate.  As soon as there is abuse, that is the conversation finished.  That goes for lawyers too.

 

I do not have any problem with threats of legal action because I have done nothing wrong.  I have raised awareness of an abuse of charity using evidence and facts available from the charity and others.  There is no law against that.  Tinfoil can scream and shout all he wants but the harsh reality is that none of the guilty parties have ever issued any rebuttal or denial.

 

Despite several emails, no one from Kenny MacAskill’s office or Police Scotland have ever been in touch about my concerns (democracy, eh?).  OSCR, the Scottish Charity Regulator, have been in touch officially but only to confirm receipt of my various emails to them and to confirm that their investigation is ongoing (I will be sending them a copy of “conflicting interest” later tonight).

Is Ally up s**t creek without a paddle?

Just another quick post to follow up some previous twitter comments.

Ally McCoist has embarked upon a £10k fundraising campaign for the Rangers Charity Foundation.  Good stuff!

He is aiming to achieve this by navigating some white water rapids in Idaho (the River Salmon) with a team of Rangers Charity Foundation supporters.

My interest in this was piqued a couple of weeks ago when I noticed that he had only raised £219.  I therefore raised awareness of the event in my blog and subsequently on twitter (I am not claiming credit here for now getting him to the £8,000 he has currently raised).

What I found particularly strange was that the target seemed so low.  Mr McCoist is a wealthy man through his footballing and media endeavours as are many of his associates, friends and colleagues.  Indeed, I would have anticipated a target of £100,000 to be more appropriate especially when one considers the costs involved in this sort of thing.  I decided therefore to keep an eye on this.

My curiosity was further raised by a tweet from Ally McCoist’s son on Thursday, 22 May in which he stated that the airline had given away their business class seats because they were late.  Business class seats on a fundraising trip?  Hmmm…

So I have followed the redoubtable Mr McCoist junior and it transpires that he spent 3 days in New York City in a hotel overlooking Times Square.  Then he flew out to Denver before catching a connecting flight to Boise, Idaho and then another connection to Salmon, Idaho.  Following the rafting, Mr McCoist junior has helpfully informed us that he will be in San Francisco afterwards although it is unclear for how long or if this is part of the charity programme or, em, personal business.

A wee friend in the travel agency business did a bit of research for me and priced the flights only package at £4,500 (based on business class).  A hotel in New York overlooking Times Square would set you back about £300 per night.  So that’s at least £5,000.

On top of this, of course, one has to add the cost of the white water rafting.  I am reliably informed that the RCF party are participating in a five day experience costing £1,500.  So we’ve now got a running total of £6,500 per head.

Yes folks, Ally McCoist has gone all the way to America to raise £1,500.  If Mr McCoist is indeed employed on an annual salary of £750,000 as rumoured that 1/500 of his annual salary or about half-a-day; not quite a tithe, eh?

Anyway, I digress.  Eagle-eyed readers will have spotted that I mention both Ally McCoist and his son.  They may also have spotted that I mentioned that Mr McCoist is leading a team.

Now, I could be mistaken here but I’ve trawled (yes, it is an obsession) Just Giving and I cannot find a single entry for Ally’s Idaho Challenge other than that under Ally’s own name.  There is no account in his son’s name and there is no other account specific to Idaho.

That’s very strange…I mean where are the funds being raised by other rafters?  You don’t think they could all be in one Just Giving account, do you?  But, but, but, but that would mean that the charity is now paying everyone to take a holiday at its expense!  Surely not?

Maybe those nice, responsive people at the Rangers Press Office or the Rangers Charity Foundation itself can reply and let me know (they’ve got the email address)?

If they do decide to respond perhaps they could also let me know how they plan to ensure that the insurance policy they’ve obviously taken out to protect the rafters is legally binding if it hasn’t actually been legally executed by the board of trustees?